A crew works on replacing a pole on a sand and debris-covered street in the Belle Harbor neighborhood of Queens, N.Y.(Photo: Craig Ruttle, AP)
HICKSVILLE, N.Y. -- Priscilla Niemiera has a message for officials at the Long Island Power Authority.
"I'd
tell them, get off your rear end and do your job," the 68-year-old
Seaford resident said. Well, she would if she could get in touch with
anyone.
Over the last two weeks since she lost power from Superstorm Sandy, she says, "every time I called they hung up on me."
While
most utilities have restored electricity to nearly all their customers,
LIPA still has tens of thousands of customers in the dark.
The
company said that the storm was worse than anyone could have imagined
and that it didn't just damage outdoor electrical lines; it caused
flooding that touched home and business breaker boxes. It acknowledged
that an outdated computer system for keeping customers notified has
added to people's frustration.
But some say the government-run
utility should have seen it coming. It was recently criticized in a
withering state report for lax preparation ahead of last year's
Hurricane Irene and for the 25-year-old computer system used to pinpoint
outages and update customers.
"It's antiquated. I think they're
negligent," said Phil Glickman, a retired Wall Street executive from
South Bellmore who waited 11 days to get electricity back.
LIPA
has restored power to more than 1.1 million homes and offices. About
19,000 customers were still waiting for the lights to come back early
Tuesday.
The utility says there also are some along Long Island's
south shore and Rockaway Peninsula that had water damage to electrical
panels and wiring, so their service can't be restored without an
inspection and possibly repairs.
At its peak, the storm knocked
out power to 8.5 million customers in 10 states, with New York and New
Jersey bearing the brunt. Those outages have been nearly erased, though
Consolidated Edison, the chief utility in New York City, has cited
problems similar to LIPA's, saying about 16,300 customers in flooded
areas of Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island can't get service until
their internal electrical equipment is repaired, tested and certified.
Niemiera,
whose finished basement in Seaford flooded, said her house needs to be
inspected and she can't get any answers. "I think LIPA should be broken
up into small companies and it shouldn't be a monopoly anymore because
this is every single time we have a disaster. And then they raise the
rates. We're paying very high rates. We're paying high taxes, high
electric. Everything," she said.
LIPA, whose board is chosen by
the governor and lawmakers, contracts with National Grid for service and
maintenance. Last year, its board chose a new contractor, New Jersey's
Public Service Enterprise Group, which will take over in 2014. Gov.
Andrew Cuomo criticized the storm response of all New York utilities in
the region, saying their management had failed consumers.
Asked
Monday about LIPA board vacancies he hasn't filled and whether he takes
responsibility for what's happening there, Cuomo called the authority a
holding company that became "an intergovernmental political
organization." He said National Grid was the actual Long Island power
provider, one of the monopolistic state-regulated utilities. "They're
going to be held accountable," he said, citing lack of communication and
preparation and even proposing they consider rebates instead of rate
hikes.
A state report criticized LIPA in June for poor customer
communications after Irene last year and for insufficient tree trimming.
The Department of Public Service noted major problems in telling
customers estimated power-restoration times, faulting its computer
system, which a consultant had found deficient back in 2006.
LIPA
acknowledged that customers aren't getting the information they need,
partly because of the system, which it is updating. Authority officials
said the new system will be operating next year.
"It is a huge
computer system. After Irene we immediately accelerated that process,
and even at that it is still an 18-month to two-year process," LIPA's
chief operating officer, Michael Hervey, said Monday. "We would have
liked to have had it up and running for now, but it's just such a large
magnitude computer system that it takes that long."
Hervey said
the company will be working with remaining customers over the next
several weeks as they get their homes repaired. "They can't be safely
re-energized from an electrical standpoint," he said. "We are ready to
service those areas, but they are not ready to take it right now."
John
Bruckner, president of National Grid Long Island transmission and
distribution, said he had about 15,000 people working on restoration,
including 6,400 linemen from all over the U.S. and Canada.
Matthew
Cordaro, co-chairman of the Suffolk Legislature's LIPA Oversight
Committee and a former utility executive, said Con Ed and Public Service
Electric & Gas New Jersey did a good job responding to the storm,
and LIPA didn't.
While a storm of that magnitude would challenge
any electricity provider, he said LIPA is probably one of the most
poorly run utilities and has a "crazy" public-private organizational
structure that's fraught with problems and raises questions of
accountability.
In New Jersey, post-Sandy recovery moved ahead,
with Gov. Chris Christie announcing that the odd-even system of gas
rationing would end starting Tuesday. The head of NJ Transit said a
severely damaged rail line could be up and running more quickly than
what had been estimated.
Associated Press